The Butler Weekly Times Newspaper, April 6, 1887, Page 7

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a 5, Absolutely Pure. never varies. A marvel ofpurity, ‘wholsomeness. More ecosomica! endcannot be sold in with the smultitade of low at ‘alam or phosphate powd Sol incans. RoraL .. N.Y. AKING PowDER Co., 106 48 The BUYER GUIDE ts Sept. GOMERY WARD & CO. '& $99 Wabash Avenue, Chicago, Il. ‘DR. SCOTT'S beaut. arto, ‘sete. R SCOTT'S i Jectric bee tes. Address is Nenve anv Brary Trea d ific for Hysteria, Di its, Nervous Neuralgia, ous Prostration caused by the nso ret th ‘akofulness, Mental Do- © Brain resulting in in- i isery, dedi to misery, decay 5 eee orercexettion of thobatn well: h bor contains haner ovec-indulgence, Fac Age, nt ~ .00 a bo: ix be mt bymsall propaidion roseipt of Drico, /& GUARANTEE SIX BOXES lense. With each order received byus accompanied with $5.00, wo will ff our written guarantee to _re- - ney if the treatment does noteffect .D issued only by ' @0HN 0. WEST & CO, WRW. MADION sT., CHICAGO, ILLS., Bole Prop’s West's Liver Pills, ereretsiion ¢ see oricinl. Stamp, AMES MEANS’ eo $3 SH a eee OE. in. Unex- card Appearance, sent tous will bring you in- formation how to get this Shoe in any fate or ys, Means &Co aa ‘Produces: % facto ‘a larger quantity as who wear them witl te ° ERek them. SAMES unapproached in nae lines'ef the above'shoes for sale by DING Retailers ROUGHOUT THRE U. s. an ‘p Send six cents RIZE...° postage, and free, a costly box of goods which all, ofeither sex, to more mon- ptaway than anything else in the Ines await the workers ab- Sure. At once addresss Truef{& 1y-tyr* August: Matae, Oo A WEEE. me Ot gentiem n desireing pleasant €mployment write at once. a tunett rou to at sight. indie an article of do- recommends itself STAPLE AS Sells like hot cakes. Profits Families wishing te prac- y should tor their own Used every found in every household. Feach of all. Circulars free SAMPLE FREE. Ad- ic Mn? g Co., Marion particulars. iN 48 6m. SY GAPSULE LATEST DISCOVERY. 8 Celebrated Indispensable for Gealed 60, Ch r Meston ‘the paper. ¢ Railroad Law Odious. The developments ot the last few | days show that, while the New York | railroad magnates have abandoned idea of defying the new railroad law openly and boldly, they have deter- mined to strain and torture its pro- visions and go as far as they can in making them needlessly and unjust:- fiably oppressive tothe public. Ap- parently the Western railroad mana- gers who started out with the inten- | tion ot construing the law tairly and hberally have been overruled by the | watered stock gluttons of the east, | and are now acting under orders to Put the screws on shippers in the hope ot making the inter-state com- merce act obnoxious and creating a public demand for its repeal at the next session of Congress. Such a policy only can explain the outra- geous jump of grain rates from Min- neapolis to Chicago trom 7 1-2 to 18 cents, the heavy increase in the rates exacted from commercial travelers, the abolition of excursion rates, and the determination to continue pay- ing commission in plain violation of law. Wherever the inter-state com- merce act can’ be tortured to cover an abuse it 1s strained one way, and wherever it can be made oppressive to the public it is twisted the other, This tatuou policy can proceed only from the insatiable stock-gamblers ot the East, who are determined to nulhfy the new law and continue taxing the west to pay dividends on vast masses of watered stocks, but who, in making the ettort, show no appreciation ot the intelligence and character ot the people with whon. they are dealing. The railroad offi- cials here in Chicago must be acting against their judgment and in obe- dience to orders from Wall street.—- Chicago Tribune. State of Ohio, City of Toledo, ). | Lucas’County; S.S. * 5 Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the senior partner ot the firm of F j- Cheney & Co., doing business in the city of Toledo, county, and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum ot $100 for each and every case of Catarrh that can not be cured by the use of Hali’s Catarrh Cure, Frunk J. CHENEY. Sworn to betore me and subscribed in my presence, this oth day of Dec., a. p., 1886. {SEAL } A. W. GLEason, Notary Public. P. S.—Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally and acts directly upon the blood and mucus surfaces ot the system. Send tor testimonials, free. F, J. Cuenry & Co., Toledo, O. pee Sold by druggists, 75 cents. 19-1m The “Wild West” Invades London. New York, March 2g.—Cut Meat, Standing Bear, Buck Taylor, An- tonio Esquivel, the Deadwood stage- coach, the bucking bronchos, the tents and the tent poles, the Ochre and the Indians and all that went to make up the Wild West show em— barked to-day on the steamship Ne- braska of the State line tor England. It was the most picturesque cargo that ever left New York. Every- thing Western was carried aboard the vessel except the Yosemite val- ley and the Rocky mountains, Buf- falo Bill is going to show his show in London as the active part of the American exposition Queen Vic- toria will have a chance to attend 1t on the fiftieth birthday ot her reign, and may bring in all her grandchil- dren at half price. The amphithe- atre in which Buffalo Bill’s Indians will scalp and yell is right in the heart ot London, and will seat 30,- 000 people. The Public Interested. When manutacturers of an article are asking the public to consume their wares, it is indeed retreshing to know that they are reliably en- dorsed, as illustrated by the united endorsement of Dr. Harter’s lron Tonic and Liver Pills by the drug- gists of St. Paul. New Story of Lincoln. At a dinner in Albany the other day the Hon, Andrew S. Draper told this story ot Lincoln: ‘‘Imme- diately after the battle of Gettysburg Lircoln sat down and wrote a per- emptory order to Gen. Meade to intercept Lee in his retreat, give him battle, and by this bold stroke crush the rebel army and end the rebellion. The order was accompanied by a friendly note, m which the great patriot said to Meade: ‘The order I inclose 1s not one of record. It you succeed, you need not publish the order. It you fail, publish it. Then, it you succeed, you will have all the credit of the movement. If not, I'll take the responsibility.’ ’’ rthur was te suinmer in Florida, From Jacksonville he went further south in a steamboat. One day the boat stopped at the wharf ot a town where an immense crowd of people had assembled to see | president. the Among them were many | politicians and men ot influence. | Back in the crowd was a ragged negro Jad holding a young eaglet in his arms. He had walked twenty miles to bring this gitt to the presi- dent, and now, foot-sore and covered with dust, but with his black tace beaming with pleasure, was hurrying across the gangplank, when he was sternly ordered back by the officers of the boat. The crowd set on him and forced him back. Mr. Arthur caught sight of the negro’s face, tull of misery and disappointment, and instantly comprehended the situation. Ye beckoned to the boy, whom he met on the plank, listened simlingly to the story of how the eagle had been caught and brought as a gitt to the president, and then explained how impossible it would be tor him to carry it with him on his long jour- ney. He dismissed the lad with warm thanks and a hearty shake of the hand and sent hin away proud and happy. “We don’t have to recommend Parker’s Hair Balsam but once’’ writes Mr. C. A. Burger, druggist, of Liberty, N. Y. ‘After that it stands on its record.’ It stops tall- ing hair, restores original color, sottness and gloss, Exceptionally clean, prevents dandruff. Place for the Bustle. The brilliant El!a Wheeler Wil- cox declares that she likes the bustle in a large city. She can scarcely be blamed for her liking, but at this time of vear, when the season for setting hens has arrived, the proper’ place tor the bustle is on the farm. —Philadelphia Press. We differ trom the Butler should be worn. Press. Any gitl can tell where the bustle Energy will do almost anything, but it cannot exist if the blood is im- pure and moves siuggishly in the veins, There 1s nothing so good for cleansing the blood and imparting energy to the system as Ayer’s Sar saparilla. Price $1. Six bottles, $5. Sold by druggists. A Point in Political Economy. Tom Marshall, when in congress, illustrated a point in political econo- my and unconsciously delivered an agricultural suggestion, when he ex- claimed in a speech: **Mr. Speaker, if I were your neighbor and you were my neighbor, and we were farmers, and raised potatoes and nothing but potatoes, then, sir, I would have nothing to give you tor your potatoes but potatoes.’’—San Francisco Alta. Farmers, Send 10 cents to the PrickKLy AsH Bitters Co, St. Louis, Mo., and get a copy ot “THe Horse TRAINER.” A complete system, teaching how to break and train horses in a mild and gen- tle wav, requiring no elaborate apparatus, nothing more than can be tound in any stable in the country—a rope anda strap. Every one handling norses should haye a copy. Ig-Im Temperance legislation 1s seldom enliyened by a genuine novelty, but a measure 1s being advocated in Vir- ginia which is an exception to the tule. It is proposed to prohibit the sale of intoxicants to all who are not licensed liquor drinkers. The license is to cost $1 a year and be non-trans- terable, and the proceeds are to go to the school fond. The scheme is a very interesting one, to say the least of it, and if adopted will not only yield a handsome revenue, but also prevent a man from being a total abstainer ‘‘on principle’’ at home and a tippler in saloons. There are some districts in which the license would he equivalent to a per capita tax of $1 on each adult male mem- ber of the community. “The light-that lies In woman’s eyes,”” is a ray of heaven’s own brightness ; but it is, alas! often dimmed or quenched by some wearing disease, perhaps silently borne, but taking all comtort and enjoyment out of life. That hight of the household ean be rekindled and made to glow with its natural brightness. Dr. R. V. Pierce’s ‘Favorite Prescription’ is a potent specific for most of the chronic weaknesses and diseases pe- culiar to women. He Fled With the Boodle. Years ago Senator Vest, when a young man, occasionally indulged in the fascinating game called draw poker, a game which we know is | | thoroughly understood in all its de- | jtails in Clinton county, Missour. | Well, once on a time Vest had tried ceived a large fee for clearing his }man. So much money in the hands | of the young lawver was as tempting to the denizens as a cool watermelon to a hungry negro. The result was a game of poker was gotten up. The boys intended to fleece Vest, and of course stocked the cards. They had no piace to play but a little shed that had no floor but some fresh, dry wheat straw. It was a five handed game, and a dry-goods box seryed as a table. It happened to be a jack pot, and Vest opened it on three queens. The cards being fixed, the other fellows had better hands, of course raised before the draw. Vest stood the raise and drew two cards. As luck would have it he got the other queen. The betting commenced and grew ex- ceedingly warm. They would raise the young lawyer and he would see them and go a hittle better. An out- sider who stood in with the gang, looked over Vest’s shoulder and saw what a formidable hand he had. He held up tour fingers, shook his head, and in other ways tried to warn his triends, but to no purpose. Hesaw that Vest would break the crowd, so he lit a match and set the straw on the floor on fire and told themto run for dear hfe. That cool head which: serves him so well now, and which neyer lets him become rattled, did not desert him then. With one hand he raked im-the boodle, with the other he exhibited his lovely queens, and as he went cut of the door with his coat-tail on fire-he said: ‘Let her burn; the pot 1s mine,’’ —Lathrop Monitor. It will not disappoint you. It 1s the best article known tor purifying the blood and building up the health and strength. For 25 years erysip elas broke out in biotches on my face. I found] no cure until I used Parker’s Tonic two years ago. It is the medicine for me,—E. C. H. They Love Phil Armour Now. The next time Mr. Phil Armour goes through Atlanta his company will be earnestly sought. When he was here the last time he said to a tew friends: ‘Pork is a very good tLing to tackle about now.’’ These triends quietly tackeld pork, and the result is they have made small for- tunes. The day Mr, Armour was here pork was about $13.50 a barrel. It is now something over $20 a bar tel. It could have been bought then on a margin of so cents a barrel. A deposits of $1,000 would have secur ed 2,000 barrels of pork, on which a speculater could have drawn out $14,000 clear profit. A number of Atlantians have made trom $2,000 to $12,000 on the corner in pork that Mr. Armour had set the tng- gers tor betore he left Chicago, and the pointer on which he distributed to his friends in Atlanta while munch- ing crackers and drinking cham- paigne.—Atlanta Constitution A slight cold often proves the forerunner of a complaint which may be fatal. Avoid this result by taking Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral, the best remedy for colds, coughs, and all throat and lung diseases. An eastern drummer was travel- ling through Tennessee recently, and while near. Knoxville in that State, listened to the complaints of a mountaineer about hard times for ten or fifteen years. Finally the drummer said to him, ‘“‘why, man, you ought to get rich shipping green corn to the northern market."” ‘‘Yes, I orter,’? wasthe reply. ‘You have the land and can get the seed, I sup- pose?” ‘Yes.’ ‘Then why don’t you go into the speculation?” ‘No use stranger,’’ sadly replied the na- tive; “the old woman is tou darned lazy to do the plowing and planting.’’ Mo. Republican:—**Mr. Blaine finds ro statue of Thomas Jefferson mm Missouri, but he finds a demo- cratic majority of 50,000 as a monu- ment more enduring than brass to the memory of that greatest of Amer- If IS WONDERFUL it ws ed to tind rictin er the acute or chronic form. He learns the fearful tenacity of its | ip and the utter powerlessness of the ordinary remedies to give reiief. Probably to no disease have physicians i » study, and none has more a specific; and until Athlophoros was dis- evvered would surely cure rheumatism, neuralgia and nervous or sick headache. Thousands of testimonials like the following prove beyond question that Athlophores is the only reliable remedy, and that it will do all that is claimed for it. Englewood, Kansas. Athlophoros has done me more good than all other medicine put together, for I was a great sufferer from rheumatism and neu- raigia, and can say to-day, Iam free from beth complaints. Mrs. Maria Stone. W. S. Hopkina, 179 C. Avenue, Cedar Rapids, Iowa says: “ My wife and daugh- ter were both stricken with inflammatory rheumatism at the sametime. The lower limbe were much swollen; the pain seemed much beyond endurance; sleep was out of the question; they suffered so much that to move or even touch the sheet on the bed would cause the most violent pain. They were confined to the bed four weeks. During that time and previous I bought many kinds of medicine, then I employed a physician, but nothing gave relief until T heard of Athlophoros. I bought a bottle at once, and am glad to say in a very short time the swelling was reduced, the pain gone, and they were entirely well.” Every druggist should keep Athlophoros and Athlophoros Pills, but where they can- not be bought of the druggist the Athlo- Phioros Co., 112 WalgSt., New York, will send ejther (carriage paid) on receipt of regular price, which is $1.60 per bottle for Athlophoros and 5c. for Pils. Port and kidney diseases, dyspepsia, in- 4 weakness, nervous debility, Tiseases on, constipation, her e, impure , Athlophoros Pills are unequaled. 11 SCHWENCK & OLDEAKER. Boot & Shoe Makers BUTLER, MO. Boots and Shoes made to order best ot leather used. The Shop nerth side ot Square. 49 tf TO HAVE HEALTH THE LIVER MUST BE KEPT IN ORDER. URSANORD'S ‘for Liver Complaints and ills caused by a Terpid con- he Live pepela, Constipation, Biliousness, Rneumationm,etc.’ It regeistes THE ONLY TRUE MANY LAMP 8 ARE i oo CHIMNEY: ae as good as the PEARL TOP ARE NOT! ————Ee ASK FOR THE PEARLTOP | sire, that noted i owned by D. A. C | a thoroughbred Reen : } completely batied their efforts to provide | | 4 Case in a little county seat and re- | WING WiAiLLIanm. ill make nt season at my stable miles west or Ballard, Mo. He isa dark bav, 16 one inch high, 4 vears old this spring, ton, Wild Irishman, t, of Butler; dam, h mare, Terms: $10 to insure amare with toal, ates coun $7.50 tor the season and $6 single leap. there was no medicine which | When a mare is knowa to be with toal, the monev is due, or if mare leaves the | County or changes ownership insurance is tortrited and monev must be paid whether mare is with foal or not. 16-1m JOHN EVANS. Trustee’s Sale. Whereas, R. J Starke, by his d dated Octover 16th. 5 aad a, eae Tecorder’s office within and for Bates count, Missouri. in book No. 40, 579, copy. ed to the undersigned trustee the following eacri- bed real estate, lying and being situate in the county of Bates and State of Missourt to-wit: _ The east half of lote three (3), and four (4). in blook two (2), in Montgomeries third (3) Oa? dition to the town now city of Butler, at a . ee fund mortgage for eight hundred URich COMTATRRES 7 made in trust to secu ie payment of a certain note full described in said deed of trust; and neread, default has been made in the payment of said note now long past dueand unpaid. Now, therefore, at the request of the legal holder of said note, and pursuant to the con- ditions of said deed of trust, I will Proceed to sell the above described _— at public vendue, to the highest bidder for cash, at the eaat front door of the court house in the city of Butler, county of Bates and State of Missouri, on Friday, April Sth, 1887, between the hours sf90’clock in the forenoon and 5 o’clock in the afternoon of that day, for the pu of satisfying said debt, ini and costs. 16 ¥.M. ALLEN, Trustee. Trustee’s Sale. Whereas, G. C. Clardy and Margaret V-. Clardy, his wife, by their deed of trust dated October ith, 1885, and recorded in the re- Siitsouri. in book B8, page 135" convey to the issouri. in , page conv. ee rare trustee the followi en ate, la: of Bates and state of uri, to-wit: All tract of land described as follows: five hundred and forty-seven and three feet south and six hundred sixty and one half feet west on soe conte e ra (22), township forty Yange thirty-one (31), thence west two hundred and twenty feet (: thencasouth five hundred and twenty: feet (528), more or leas; thence east two hun- dred and twenty feet (220), thence north five hundred and twenty-eight feet (528), more or less to the place of inning; which convey- ance was made in trast to secure the Lat re | of one certain note fully described in said deed of trust, and, whereas, defaujt has been made in the payment of said note or any part thereof, said note is now long past due and unpaid, now, therefore, at the request of the legal hol- der of said note and pursuant to the conditions of said deed of trust, I will proceed to sell the above described premises at pulic vendue, to highest bidder, for cash, at the east front door’ of the court house, in the city of Butler, couns ty of Bates and state of Missouri, on Saturday April gth, 1887, between the hours of 9 o’clock in the forenoon and 5 0’clock in the afternoon of that day, for the purposes of satisfying said debt, interest and costs. 16 JOHN T. SMITH, Trustee. twenty-two Trustee’s Sale. Whereas, John Burns, by a deed of trust dated the 18th day of July, 1886, and recorded in the office of the recorder of deeds of Bates county, Missouri, in Book No. 36, on page 5,conveyed to the undersigned trustee the following de- scribed real estate, situate in Bates county. Missouri, to-wit: ‘Lots numbered ten (10) and eleven (11), block numbered one hund: and seventy (170), in the 2nd addition to the Bieb Hill Town Company in the town of Rich Hall, to secure the payment of @ certain promissory note therein described and all interest ear and whereas, it is provided in said deed of trust that upon default in payment e@efsaid note orthe interest, or any part thereof, when the same or any part thereof shall become due and payable, then the whole debt shall become due and the deed of trust shall and may be foreclosed and the property sold to pay said note or interest so due thereon; and whereas, default has been made in the payment @f interest on said note, which interest is still due and unpaid; and whereas, the legal holder of the said note, on which said interest so past due, has requested me fo sell the property under and by virtue of the power given me by said deed of Now notice is hereby given that I, the und ed. trustee, by virtue of and under authority of the power of sale in said deed of trust set forth, will on Friday, April 8, A, D. 1887, at the court house door in the town of Butler, im the county of Bates and state of Missouri, and between the hours of 9 o’clock in the fore- noon and 5 0’clock in the afternoon of that day, proceed to sell the real estate therein described at public auction tothe highes: for the pu! of satisfying the debt by the phe eal af LaF the costsand expenses eding com: ion tothe trustes for his enon specited in said deed of trust of execu’ " ~ <2 G. G. GLAZEBROOK, {Sheriff and Acting Trastee. Trustee’s Sale. Whereas, Calvin Stevens and Sarah E. Stevens, his wife, by their deed of trust dated November lith, 1883, and recorded in the recorder’s office within and for Bates We are WORKING CLASSES ja raetd

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